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Fox News Names 2 Insiders to Top Posts Fox News Names 2 Insiders to Top Posts
(35 minutes later)
Three weeks after Roger Ailes’s ouster as chairman and chief executive of Fox News, the cable network has promoted two people to top leadership positions.Three weeks after Roger Ailes’s ouster as chairman and chief executive of Fox News, the cable network has promoted two people to top leadership positions.
The veteran Fox executives Bill Shine and Jack Abernethy were named co-presidents, Rupert Murdoch, the Fox News chief executive, announced in a statement on Friday. Mr. Shine will be in charge of programming at Fox News and Fox Business Network, while Mr. Abernethy will be in charge of finance, business and legal affairs.The veteran Fox executives Bill Shine and Jack Abernethy were named co-presidents, Rupert Murdoch, the Fox News chief executive, announced in a statement on Friday. Mr. Shine will be in charge of programming at Fox News and Fox Business Network, while Mr. Abernethy will be in charge of finance, business and legal affairs.
It was also announced that Fox News’s longtime chief financial officer, Mark Kranz, is stepping down. The network also announced that its longtime chief financial officer, Mark Kranz, was stepping down.
“Bill Shine has developed and produced a signature primetime that has dominated the cable news landscape for 14 of his 20 years with Fox News,” Mr. Murdoch said in a statement. “His leadership and keen eye for programming has played a fundamental role in the success of both Fox News and Fox Business Network.” The moves provide Fox News with a leadership structure for the time being as the network navigates an election season and an uncertain future, while also dealing with the departure of Mr. Ailes, who helped Mr. Murdoch start the network 20 years ago but left after sexual harassment allegations by the former anchor Gretchen Carlson.
Mr. Murdoch also said that Mr. Abernethy’s appointment “will ensure continued growth of Fox News and Fox Business Network for generations to come.” Mr. Shine, who has been with Fox since shortly after the channel debuted in 1996, is a favored figure among some veteran anchors, including Sean Hannity, who first recommended him to Mr. Ailes for a job. A Long Island native, Mr. Shine cut his teeth at the network producing Mr. Hannity’s program and working closely with personalities like Bill O’Reilly. His appointment on Friday was widely viewed as a sign of continuity at a chaotic time in the newsroom.
This provides Fox News a leadership structure for the time being as the network navigates an election season and an uncertain future, while also dealing with the departure of Mr. Ailes, who helped Mr. Murdoch start the network 20 years ago but left in the wake of sexual harassment allegations by the former anchor Gretchen Carlson. Mr. Murdoch, also the executive chairman of 21st Century Fox, Fox News’s parent company, is expected to stay in the role of the network’s chief executive until at least through the presidential election in November. Investigators from the law firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison who are looking into the allegations against Mr. Ailes are also examining whether other executives knew of alleged improper behavior by him and failed to act on it.
Fox News also announced that Suzanne Scott has been named executive vice president of programming and will oversee the network’s daytime and primetime opinion shows. Jay Wallace will remain in charge of the news division. Ms. Scott and Mr. Wallace will report to Mr. Shine. Mr. Shine’s name, along with those of other executives, surfaced in the accounts of three women who recently came forward to say they had been harassed by Mr. Ailes while at Fox News and described a culture of intimidation at the network. Through a spokeswoman, Mr. Shine has denied any wrongdoing. Mr. Ailes has denied all of the allegations against him.
“Bill Shine has developed and produced a signature prime time that has dominated the cable news landscape for 14 of his 20 years with Fox News,” Mr. Murdoch said in a statement. “His leadership and keen eye for programming has played a fundamental role in the success of both Fox News and Fox Business Network.”
Mr. Murdoch, also the executive chairman of 21st Century Fox, Fox News’s parent company, is expected to stay in the role of the network’s chief executive until at least through the presidential election in November. He has been active at the network since taking over the role previously held by Mr. Ailes and has become a regular fixture at news meetings. He has also taken over Mr. Ailes’s second-floor corner office.
Mr. Murdoch said that Mr. Abernethy’s appointment “will ensure continued growth of Fox News and Fox Business Network for generations to come.”
Fox News also announced that Suzanne Scott had been named executive vice president of programming and would oversee the network’s daytime and prime-time opinion shows. Jay Wallace will remain in charge of the news division. Ms. Scott and Mr. Wallace will report to Mr. Shine.